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24 Articles match "Listserv","Practice"
The Latest from the Communities and Networks Connection Community
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Saturday, February 20, 2010
The International Journal of Internet Research Ethics (IJIRE) seeks papers from researchers describing best ethical practices in the investigation of online communities. This special issue, edited by Aleks Krotoski, aims to create a compendium of case studies and theoretical frameworks which future scholars will reference when designing their own analyses of populations and practices in social networking sites, weblogs, listservs, online games, video sharing sites, virtual worlds and other Web environments that demonstrate evidence of community processes.
Topics of particular interest include:
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Thursday, February 4, 2010
It started in a innocent enough way when, in a discussion about knowledge sharing and generation on the KM4Dev listserve, somebody cited the DIKW model as a way of describing how knowledge is generated in organisations. This provoked Dave Snowden into some sharp but illuminating posts (by the way, if you ever get bored and feel like doing some Dave-baiting, get yourself a false identity, sign up to one of the listserves he frequents, and make an enthusiastic post about DIKW, wisdom management, Ayn Rand or KM certification - or any combination thereof):
“I That most hallowed of mental models and glib explanations, the Data-Information-Knowledge-Wisdom hierarchy has taken a bit of a beating this week.
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Monday, December 14, 2009
am beginning to think of the Cynefin domains as a stack of interacting layers, with little (or large) explosions of activity in different parts of the system triggering cascades – but I think I either need a lot more time or a bigger brain to think this idea through to something practical.
Thanks to John Bordeaux via the actKM listserve for flagging thi VERY interesting interpretation of Dave Snowden’s Cynefin Framework from Noah Raford , adding a temporal, cyclical dimension to it by blending it with Gunderson and Holling ’s cycle of adaptive change.
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The Best from the Communities and Networks Connection Community
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Thursday, March 26, 2009
you have ever hankered to read a “real life” story about an organic community of practice, one free from the business pressures of CoPs manufactured inside of corporations, read this book. Identifying a new practice and refining it.)
listserv or web forum, Twitter, etc.)
Spidergram examples of the Central Park Birdwatchers - click for larger image
My friend Sue Wolff generously lent me two books recently. The first, Marie Winn’s “ Red-Tails in Love ” captured my heart and mind.
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Saturday, March 28, 2009
If you have ever hankered to read a “real life” story about an organic community of practice, one free from the business pressures of CoPs manufactured inside of corporations, read this book. Identifying a new practice and refining it.)
listserv or web forum , Twitter , etc.)
Spidergram examples of the Central Park Birdwatchers - click for larger image (Crossposted from my Full Circle blog )
My friend Sue Wolff generously lent me two books recently.
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Wednesday, June 18, 2008
Home Products & services Support & downloads My account Select a country
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Saturday, July 8, 2006
SCD and Intercooperation have commissioned a study called Experiences with communities of practice in India , an important resource published in december 2005. A wide variety of groups and networks were studied, like a farmers group producing a journal, an exchange programme, a listserv and email discussion group, and information sharing group on livelihoods and gender equity and a group championing women's rights. It is a good study looking at exisiting CoPs in the development sector in India. The important features of the groups has been the leadership provided by a few individuals
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Wednesday, February 4, 2009
Home What we do Keynote Speaking About Us Whitepapers Anecdote Associates Clients Contact us Categories Anecdotes Blogging Books Change management Collaboration Communities of practice Complexity Culture Expertise location Facilitation Fun Intervention design Knowledge Knowledge circulation Most Significant Change Narrative News Newsletter Open space Questions Quotes Sensemaking Social networks Storytelling Strategy « Management can kill a community of practice | Main | Getting into a sensemaking mindset » 31/07/06 | The difference
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Thursday, December 8, 2005
Specialist transfer (transfer of explicit knowledge about a task not performed on a regular basis) This is a typical case where a listserve may work. (just The reason to name a certain scattered, existing knowledge practice is to make is a legitimate activity, which makes a request for support no longer a favour from your colleague but a recognised part of your professional practice. * Putting all implicit knowledge on paper on in text is very hard. I went to the local library because they had purchased their first book on weblogs (apparently Rosmalen is about to enter blogosphere).
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Thursday, February 4, 2010
It started in a innocent enough way when, in a discussion about knowledge sharing and generation on the KM4Dev listserve, somebody cited the DIKW model as a way of describing how knowledge is generated in organisations. This provoked Dave Snowden into some sharp but illuminating posts (by the way, if you ever get bored and feel like doing some Dave-baiting, get yourself a false identity, sign up to one of the listserves he frequents, and make an enthusiastic post about DIKW, wisdom management, Ayn Rand or KM certification - or any combination thereof):
“I That most hallowed of mental models and glib explanations, the Data-Information-Knowledge-Wisdom hierarchy has taken a bit of a beating this week.
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Monday, November 17, 2008
Home About Brad Hinton - plain speaking Entries RSS | Comments RSS Category Cloud Blogging Business Business strategy Change management Collaboration Communication Conference Content management Culture Education & learning Information Management Information use Just me Knowledge Management Language Libraries Management Marketing Networking Networks Organisational behaviour Presentations Research Social computing Social networking Society Storytelling
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Sunday, July 20, 2008
Most Linux hacker communication is not between individuals but by postings to open, searchable Listservs. Anyone can review the version history of the code and the Listserv debates�not executive summaries or abstracts but the raw activity itself. Doing your why-whys," as the practice is known, is not about depth at all�its about breadth. And as with Linux, Toyotas communication protocols enforce this discipline. How Toyota and Linux Keep Collaboration Simple 8/1/2005 The Toyota and Linux communities illustrate time-tested techniques for collaboration under pressure: Share knowledge widely, frequently, and in small increments, and use universally available tools to do it.
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Monday, December 14, 2009
am beginning to think of the Cynefin domains as a stack of interacting layers, with little (or large) explosions of activity in different parts of the system triggering cascades – but I think I either need a lot more time or a bigger brain to think this idea through to something practical.
Thanks to John Bordeaux via the actKM listserve for flagging thi VERY interesting interpretation of Dave Snowden’s Cynefin Framework from Noah Raford , adding a temporal, cyclical dimension to it by blending it with Gunderson and Holling ’s cycle of adaptive change.
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